Thursday, June 26, 2025 - A football coach of an under 10s team plundered thousands of pounds raised by their parents to send the excited children to a dream football tournament in Barcelona and spent it gambling on online roulette
Michael Grisedale, 39, who ran the under-10s Vauxhall Astra
team in Ellesmere Port, agreed to organise a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for
his young team to play in the Spanish competition on condition their
parents funded the fees, hotel costs
and airports transfers.
The dad-of-two then pocketed the £6,401.39 for
himself, and squandered it on online casinos.
According to Express UK, an alarm was only raised three days
before the competition was due to start when the hotel where the team was due
to stay contacted one of the parents to inform him their reservation had been
cancelled due to non-payment.
Grisedale, whose own son played in the squad, claimed
there had not been enough cash available to pay for the trip and that he
had gambled it away in a doomed bid to raise the extra money. He appeared
at Chester Crown Court this week, having pleaded guilty to 11 charges
of theft.
Oliver Saddington, prosecuting, said: “The defendant was the
team manager of an under-10s football team, called the Vauxhall Astras, who
play at Vauxhall Social Club in the Ellesmere Port area. He was responsible for
the coaching, arranging of games and tournaments and in June 2023, he saw
a Facebook advertisement for a grassroots football tournament for
children called The Barcelona Experience in Salou.
"Following this, the defendant arranged and organised
this trip for between April 9 and April 12, 2024. The handling of the money and
the financial side was managed solely by him.
"The cost per player was £329 and an additional £275
for parents wishing to attend. Included in that was payment for the tournament,
accommodation, breakfast and evening meals and transfers to and from the
airport.
"Any individual wishing to attend was to arrange their
own flights. Money was obtained by parents and sponsorship campaigns completed
by the children.
"But on April 6, 2024, Dean Carruthers, one of the
parents of the children, received a phone call from the Hotel del Marinda to
ask whether he still wanted to stay in the hotel as the original booking had
been cancelled.
"Mr Carruthers was then provided the details for a man who runs the tournament in Spain who advised he hadn't received the money from the defendant and the trip had been cancelled.
"Mr Carruthers attempted to phone the defendant for an explanation but he did not answer and he reached out to the other parents to tell them what he had found out.''
The devastated children made the trip to Salou thanks to
well-wisherswho raised the money via GoFundMe after news of Grisedale's
betrayal spread. Despite this, the football team has since been disbanded.
In a statement, one parent said: ''When I discovered that
Michael had stolen money from the team I was shocked, angry and betrayed. We
only found out from a phone call from the hotel in Barcelona. I believe if we
had not been called from the hotel the whole team would have travelled out
leaving us stranded in Barcelona.
"The emotional impact has been significant. I've worked
tirelessly to raise money for the trip and the thefts have had a profound
impact on the team. My reputation with sponsors has been damaged and any
further fundraising has been damaged. The team folded just a few weeks into the
new season. I am deeply hurt and disappointed by Michael's actions. The
betrayal of trust has caused irreparable harm."
Another mum said: "Michael caused emotional distress in
the first instance when we discovered what he had done. We considered him as a
friend and my son loved him as a football coach - but I had the distress of
telling our son that the trip was not going ahead. I'm now apprehensive when
asked for money - as it's harder to trust people's words on face value.''
Following the theft, Grisedale moved 80 miles to Osborne
Road, Blackpool, on the advice of police. It emerged he had even stolen £200
given towards the trip by his own girlfriend.
He was later traced by his girlfriend. He said he was sorry,
admitted he had "messed up" and asked her to tell his son he
"loved him". He was arrested in the Kent area on April 9.
Mr Saddington added: ''He made frank admissions to all
offences He accepted that he organised the Barcelona Experience trip and
accepted that his partner had paid a £200 deposit but said he began to panic
when they hadn’t raised enough to cover the costs. He claimed he begun to
gamble his own money to try and make it up.
"There was emotional distress to the children but
thankfully they were able in the end to travel to Salou for the tournament as a
result of crowdfunding."
Defence counsel Nicholas Williams said Grisedale now works
in a supermarket, and had scraped together £1,500 to pay back some of the
money. He said: "This has been a dramatic fall from grace for Mr
Grisedale."
He said his client made a "fundamentally stupid
decision to try and gamble his way out of the predicament he found himself
in", adding: "Of course it never worked as gambling never does.
"The more he took, the more he lost until all the money
was gone. He recognises now how foolish the decision to try and gamble that
money was. He buried his head in the sand trying to make the money back and was
panicking."
Sentencing Grisedale, Judge Natalie Cuddy said: "The
money paid to you by the parents was, I anticipate, something of a significant
stretch for some of them. There have been significant efforts to raise that
money through parents' contributions but also fundraising by children
themselves and sponsorship.
"But I am told that you have a significant gambling
problem and you showed a complete disregard for the trust placed in you by the
victims of your offending.
"The children would have very much been looking forward
to the trip, I have no doubt, but thankfully, and due to the generosity of
people in the community, they were able to go. However the excitement and the
enjoyment of that must have been for those families very much diminished by the
shadow of your offending and what happened to the money that they had paid to
you."
She sentenced Grisedale, 39, to 24 months in jail, suspended
for two years, with requirements he completes 150 hours of unpaid work and 15
days of rehabilitation activity. He must also pay back the money he stole to
his victims.
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